Seedy Sunday II – the return…

Brighton’s Seedy Sunday was circled in red on the calendar for months. My Tintin bag was crammed with 150+ packs of seeds for swapping and just generally culling from the overflowing seed boxes at home. It was a different experience to last year’s, which has its own post here, not just because it was in a new larger, venue (over a very STEEP hill, ooof! Brighton’s not flat…) but also because I was volunteering.

I’ve always thought you should judge organisations on how they treat their lowest-paid staff, in this case volunteers. Seedy Sunday treats you like royalty, not just waiving the entrance fee and making you feel special for pitching up, but giving you free tea and cake (cake!) and a big bag of chocolates as you leave. This is for a two-hour stint of stewarding. Two short hours of very well-behaved, smiley, non-heckling punters.

The new bigger venue takes away some of the cosiness – with a market hall in the gym and separate rooms elsewhere for the seed swap and talks – but then there are so many people flocking in that the extra space means you can get near the tables without sharpening your elbows. The range of stalls in the market hall was really impressive and I am kicking myself for not saving my pennies for buying my fruit trees there rather than online. The plants on sale there were generally bigger and in much better nick than some of those I’ve received in the post (my pitiful damson stick being a case in point), plus it’s so helpful to be able to talk to & get advice from the people selling them. My favourite 3 are Thomas Etty. Pennard Plants and the Heritage Seed Library – to be fair though, that goes for most edibles fairs…

The presentations were generally great too, bar the one on pesticide use which I felt could have been less Eeyore-ish and doom-laden. It’s a chance to hear what else is going on in the world of seeds & growing. I definitely want to keep tabs on Dr Adrian Ely’s work at the Science Policy Research Unit, Uni of Sussex on seed development & patenting (not something I like the sound of) and the Open Source Seed Initiative. And I was pointed in the direction of Laura Pottinger, who’s had (for me) a dream PhD topic of looking at how & why people save seeds. I am very much looking forward to reading her findings when they go online.

But two things from the event make me wonder a) if people trust self-saved seeds from others, and b) whether there shouldn’t be more emphasis on teaching practical seed saving: cleaning and drying the seed too but most importantly pollination and isolation.

The first was that my carefully saved cucurbit seeds were going to be thrown away. Being the slightly obsessive person I am, I checked what was happening, and was told that there was a general distrust of self-saved anything which doesn’t self-pollinate, squash seeds in particular. But it was really interesting to see squash and courgette seeds were one of the first to run out, along with broad beans & beetroot. All of which need isolating so they breed true.

For next year I’ve been advised to mark my seeds as ‘guaranteed isolated/true’ or they’ll be weeded out.

The second was that audience statistics (we were given techy clicky things!) from the SPRU presentation showed that 85% said they saved their own seeds, 91% wanted to go home with seeds from the event but only 37% brought some to swap.

It was a small sample (about 100) and there wasn’t time to go into why, but, from questions popping up everywhere on growing forums right now, it seems people are keen to save seed, but don’t know how to – or perhaps don’t have the confidence or patience to, or just don’t want to listen (that last is born of my frustration with an exchange about saving beetroot seeds!). Being a bit of a seed nerd I want to do more to spread the word that it’s not difficult – and I hope that the Twitter seed circle (now open, please join!) will help encourage more people to try.

I’ve come away with some real finds from the stalls and from the swaps table this year, including Upper Ground Sweet Potato Squash, which is irresistably described as a ‘going the way of the dinosaurs if people don’t work to save it’. I also bagged some great potato varieties, Hungry Gap kale, Afghan Purple carrots, cardoons, calçots, and the intriguingly named Belhomme’s Fortuna Potato Leaf tomato, about which there is very little information.

More importantly my will-power held and I DIDN’T come home with a nectarine, a medlar, a jostaberry or two nor any intriguing herbs. That’s for next year when my plots are fully tamed*. Total spend: £2.00 – plus a train ticket.

What self restraint you showed, Beryl! I am most impressed. Good tip about the labelling of self-saved seeds too, thank you! Without such care many cultivars will disappear through crossing, and that would be dreadful

I have searched in South Wales to no avail so far this year. National Botanic did one last year but sadly have not repeated. Possibly for next year I need to persuade someone that this is some thing Wales needs to do to amd help out. I was looking forward to reading about how it went, well done on resisting, not sure I would have.